Abstract

Faced with a comparatively limited palette of minerals and organic polymers as building materials, evolution has arrived repeatedly on structural solutions that rely on clever geometric arrangements to avoid mechanical trade-offs in stiffness, strength and flexibility. In this tutorial review, we highlight the concept of tessellation, a structural motif that involves periodic soft and hard elements arranged in series and that appears in a vast array of invertebrate and vertebrate animal biomaterials. We start from basic mechanics principles on the effects of material heterogeneities in hypothetical structures, to derive common concepts from a diversity of natural examples of one-, two- and three-dimensional tilings/layerings. We show that the tessellation of a hard, continuous surface - its atomization into discrete elements connected by a softer phase - can theoretically result in maximization of material toughness, with little expense to stiffness or strength. Moreover, the arrangement of soft/flexible and hard/stiff elements into particular geometries can permit surprising functions, such as signal filtering or 'stretch and catch' responses, where the constrained flexibility of systems allows a built-in safety mechanism for ensuring that both compressive and tensile loads are managed well. Our analysis unites examples ranging from exoskeletal materials (fish scales, arthropod cuticle, turtle shell) to endoskeletal materials (bone, shark cartilage, sponge spicules) to attachment devices (mussel byssal threads), from both invertebrate and vertebrate animals, while spotlighting success and potential for bio-inspired manmade applications.

Highlights

  • Natural organisms have nothing comparable to metals at their disposal and, still, they are able to grow stiff and very fracture-resistant materials, such as bones, wood or spider silk. None of these materials have the possibility of dislocation movement, which enables the plasticity of metals, and so their fracture resistance must have other origins

  • Many mechanisms that increase the fracture resistance of natural materials are linked to the geometric arrangement of different components in tissues.[2]

  • Such tessellations exist at all scales in natural materials, from molecular arrangements to macroscopic units, and they provide a range of interesting properties, such as prevention of crack propagation, flexibility and protection for biological armors, hardness and stretchiness for biological coatings, and even strain enhancement and signal filtering for mechanosensing

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Summary

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Faced with a comparatively limited palette of minerals and organic polymers as building materials, evolution has arrived repeatedly on structural solutions that rely on clever geometric arrangements to avoid mechanical trade-offs in stiffness, strength and flexibility. In this tutorial review, we highlight the concept of tessellation, a structural motif that involves periodic soft and hard elements arranged in series and that appears in a vast array of invertebrate and vertebrate animal biomaterials. We start from basic mechanics principles on the effects of material heterogeneities in hypothetical structures, to derive common concepts from a diversity of natural examples of one-, two- and three-dimensional tilings/ layerings. Key learning points (1) Learn from nature how to design fracture-resistant composite materials (2) The principles of crack propagation in elastically modulated materials (3) A look into the diversity of tessellated materials in natural organisms (4) Brick and mortar arrangements of ceramic and polymeric components of composites (5) Defect-tolerant designs of hybrid materials found in natural organisms

Introduction
Tutorial Review
Peter Fratzl is a director at the
Otmar Kolednik
Why it is hard to tear a book
Materials with periodically varying modulus
Glass sponge skeleton
Lamellar bone and arthropod cuticle
Skeletons of sharks and rays
Materials made of interlocking elements
Brick and mortar structure
Constrained flexibility
Armored fish scales
Turtle carapace
Cuticle of the mussel byssus
Geometric amplification and sensing
Findings
Conclusions and related concepts at the molecular level

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